Circadian and Sex Differences After Acute High-Altitude Exposure: Are Early Acclimation Responses Improved by Blue Light?

Objective The possible effects of blue light during acute hypoxia and the circadian rhythm on several physiological and cognitive parameters were studied. Methods Fifty-seven volunteers were randomly assigned to 2 groups: nocturnal (2200–0230 hours) or diurnal (0900–1330 hours) and exposed to acute...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wilderness & environmental medicine 2015-12, Vol.26 (4), p.459-471
Hauptverfasser: Silva-Urra, Juan A., Núñez-Espinosa, Cristian A., Niño-Mendez, Oscar A., Gaitán-Peñas, Héctor, Altavilla, Cesare, Toro-Salinas, Andrés, Torrella, Joan R., Pagès, Teresa, Javierre, Casimiro F., Behn, Claus, Viscor, Ginés
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective The possible effects of blue light during acute hypoxia and the circadian rhythm on several physiological and cognitive parameters were studied. Methods Fifty-seven volunteers were randomly assigned to 2 groups: nocturnal (2200–0230 hours) or diurnal (0900–1330 hours) and exposed to acute hypoxia (4000 m simulated altitude) in a hypobaric chamber. The participants were illuminated by blue LEDs or common artificial light on 2 different days. During each session, arterial oxygen saturation (Sp o2 ), blood pressure, heart rate variability, and cognitive parameters were measured at sea level, after reaching the simulated altitude of 4000 m, and after 3 hours at this altitude. Results The circadian rhythm caused significant differences in blood pressure and heart rate variability. A 4% to 9% decrease in waking nocturnal Sp o2 under acute hypoxia was observed. Acute hypoxia also induced a significant reduction (4%–8%) in systolic pressure, slightly more marked (up to 13%) under blue lighting. Women had significantly increased systolic (4%) and diastolic (12%) pressures under acute hypoxia at night compared with daytime pressure; this was not observed in men. Some tendencies toward better cognitive performance (d2 attention test) were seen under blue illumination, although when considered together with physiological parameters and reaction time, there was no conclusive favorable effect of blue light on cognitive fatigue suppression after 3 hours of acute hypobaric hypoxia. Conclusions It remains to be seen whether longer exposure to blue light under hypobaric hypoxic conditions would induce favorable effects against fatigue.
ISSN:1080-6032
1545-1534
DOI:10.1016/j.wem.2015.06.009